Houthis are ‘threat’ to Yemen, Saudi Arabia, and the entire region

A houthi rebel fighter holds his a weapon during a gathering aimed at mobilizing more fighters for the Houthi movement, in Sanaa, Yemen, Thursday, Feb. 20, 2020. (AP)
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Updated 21 September 2020
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Houthis are ‘threat’ to Yemen, Saudi Arabia, and the entire region

  • Five civilians injured in lastest attack at village in Jazan

JEDDAH: Houthi militias in Yemen are continuing to break international humanitarian law by targeting civilians in Saudi Arabia.
In its latest attacks on Saudi terrority, the group launched a projectile at a village in the southern Jazan region on Saturday. Five people were injured and property was damaged.
The Iran-backed militia has attacked Saudi Arabia’s territory, killing and injuring civilians in the process, since the start of the war in 2015, often to international condemnation.
“The Kingdom has tackled many Houthi attacks, which included ballistic missiles and drones that were originally intended to target civilians,” political analyst and international relations expert Dr. Hamdan Al-Shehri told Arab News. “If it wasn’t for the Kingdom’s instant response they would have caused very big damage.”
Al-Shehri said that a group like the Houthis were not expected to act differently, other than be violent and destructive. He pointed the finger at the international community for its silence as well as countries that have lifted an arms ban on Iran.
“The recently apprehended Houthi cell in Yemen smuggling Iranian weapons has admitted to receiving training in Iran, evidence of Iran’s continued involvement in Yemen. Therefore, this makes the US unilateral proclamation to reinforce UN sanctions against Iran the right thing to do now.”
Al-Shehri added that the militia was an organization whose activities would still endanger the lives of Yemeni civilians even if they did not harm neighboring countries. “They use cities as a shield and launch their rockets from inside Sanaa, among civilians.”
He said that the international community, as part of its responsibility to maintain global peace and security, was required to spare Yemenis the agony and scourge of war by implementing UN Security Council Resolution 2216 and bring the Houthis back to the negotiation table for an inclusive political solution.
“The Houthis are a threat to Yemen, Saudi Arabia, and the entire region as long as weapons remain in their hands,” Al-Shehri said.
The attack in Jazan was condemned by Egypt, Jordan and the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC).
The OIC secretary-general, Yousef Al-Othaimeen, affirmed the organization’s standing and solidarity with the Kingdom in all the measures it took to protect its borders, citizens, and residents on its territory.


Nearly 60 percent of employers have difficulty finding skilled workers, World Bank official says

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Nearly 60 percent of employers have difficulty finding skilled workers, World Bank official says

  • Luis Benveniste: We find that people lack opportunities to upskill or reskill in a rapidly changing labor market
  • Benveniste: There won’t be a jobs revolution without a skills revolution

RIYADH: Skill shortages remain a major constraint on business growth, with nearly 60 percent of employers reporting difficulty finding workers with relevant skills and capabilities, a World Bank official told Arab News.

On the sidelines of the Global Labor Market Conference in Riyadh on Tuesday, Luis Benveniste, senior adviser and acting global director for education and skills at the World Bank, said: “We find that people lack opportunities to upskill or reskill in a rapidly changing labor market, because of automation, because of digital transformation, because of climate change, jobs are changing, and so people are not able to acquire the skills that are relevant.”

He said that an estimated 70 percent of children in low and middle income countries are unable to read an age-appropriate paragraph with comprehension by the age of 10, making it harder to develop job-relevant skills later in life.

“In the absence of those foundational skills, it’s much harder to get those job-relevant skills that will enable them to open up to a fruitful, thriving career,” Benveniste said, adding that the gap often becomes more pronounced as young people enter the labor market.

He said addressing the challenge begins with expanding access to high-quality early childhood education, including proper nutrition and learning stimulation, and supporting teachers to use evidence-based teaching methods to strengthen literacy and numeracy.

He also pointed out the importance of closer coordination between governments, educators, and employers to better align training with labor market demand.

This includes engaging the private sector in curriculum development, improving labor market data systems, and expanding opportunities for apprenticeships and on-the-job training.

“More and more we see results-based financing approaches so that skilling institutions get rewarded not just for training people, but for ensuring that people who have been trained find jobs and hold those jobs six to 12 months after finalizing their training programs,” he said.

Benveniste highlighted the role of short-cycle training and micro-credentials, which allow workers to step in and out of the labor market to build flexible, stackable qualifications over time, helping them move up the job ladder.

He said that improved access to scholarships and training loans is also needed to ensure low-income learners are not excluded.

Tackling unemployment, particularly among youth and women, will require sustained collaboration between the public and private sectors, he said, adding that neither can respond to the scale of labor market change alone.

“There won’t be a jobs revolution without a skills revolution,” Benveniste said, emphasizing the need to invest in priority growth sectors such as manufacturing, agribusiness, and healthcare to ensure workers gain the capabilities required for the jobs of the future.

Speaking to Arab News, Samer Al-Kharashi, director of the UN Tourism Regional Office for the Middle East, said tourism has become a key tool for rural development and job creation, noting that a large share of the world’s poorest populations live in rural areas and are more likely to be in informal or vulnerable employment.

“Eighty-four percent of the world’s poor live in rural areas, (and) those people are twice as likely to be in informal or vulnerable employment.

“If you compare that 80 percent of them versus 44 percent in urban areas, that means that there is very important area that needs the focus of the mutual work from governments, international organizations and private sectors.”

Al-Kharashi said expanding tourism in rural regions can help create jobs, empower women and youth and support small and medium enterprises, but that it requires capacity-building, training, infrastructure and entrepreneurship support, alongside the adoption of digital and sustainable tools, including artificial intelligence.

He said the Kingdom’s tourism sector offers strong potential for Saudi entrepreneurs and SMEs, noting that local knowledge, culture, and technology skills are key assets for attracting visitors seeking authentic experiences.

“One of every 10 jobs is in tourism,” Al-Kharashi said, adding that the sector has moved from a recovery phase into a period of sustained expansion and growth, creating new opportunities in different segments of the industry.

“We can see that in numbers, tourism to national numbers have been raised in 2025 to 1.52 billion, with an increase of 4 percent from last year. So the sector is booming very strong. A lot of opportunities (are) coming. We can see that in depth.” 

He said the tourism industry is largely driven by the private sector, with governments and national organizations playing a regulatory and enabling role to ensure that development preserves the environment and supports the empowerment of women and youth.